FEATURE: Cambodia battling to save rare Mekong dolphins

A man and children look at dolphin conservation posters at a tourist site along the Mekong River in Kratie Province, Cambodia, on Dec. 6.

Photo: AFP

The sight of two dolphins twisting playfully in the murky waters of the Mekong River elicits barely stifled squeals of delight from a boatload of eco-tourists.

However, a short distance upstream, river guard Pech Sokhan sighs as he holds up two large, tangled gill nets recently pulled from the murky water — evidence old habits die hard despite a ban on the practice that ensnares many dolphins.

“We have to keep educating people every day,” said Pech, one of 77 unarmed guards who patrol the Cambodian stretch of the Mekong River on the lookout for activities that could harm the dolphins.

Entanglement in gill nets — vertical mesh nets left in the water for long periods — is the main cause of death in adult Mekong dolphins, according to experts, who believe the gray mammals with distinctive blunt beaks are in imminent danger of extinction in the river.

Estimates for the number of remaining adult Mekong River freshwater Irrawaddy dolphins range from 85 up to 180.

Although there are no comprehensive studies, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature classes the species as critically endangered.

The dwindling population faces numerous challenges including unexplained high rates of calf mortality, as well as disease, inbreeding and habitat loss. However, “gill nets are the biggest of these threats,” WWF conservationist Gordon Congdon said.

Freshwater Irrawaddy dolphins exist in only three river systems in Southeast Asia, with Cambodia hosting the largest population.

Community-based eco-tourism initiatives that allow poor villagers to generate revenue from the “smiling face of the Mekong,” mostly through boat tours and souvenir sales, are central to protection efforts.

And business is good. The region welcomed about 30,000 dolphin tourists this year, up from around 20,000 last year and just 50 in 2000, said Touch Seang Tana, who heads a government commission to protect the species.

Kampi dolphin pool in eastern Cambodia’s Kratie Province, where tourists can get up close with small groups of the mammals, is one of the success stories of government efforts to save the critically endangered creatures.

However, not all locals can get it on the act, and despite plans to open two more dolphin viewing sites, many find that cheap and efficient gill nets remain the best way to put food on the table.

“It is unending until the poverty is gone,” Touch said about the battle against the dreaded nets, which ensnare dolphins as easily as they trap fish.

“People already know that gill nets kill dolphins. But they are thinking about their own stomachs,” he said.

In what WWF hailed as “a huge step forward,” the government in August approved a dolphin protection zone in a 180km river stretch from Kratie to the border with Laos.

While fishing with small scoop nets, cast nets or hooks is still allowed in the safe zone, dolphin-unfriendly fishing methods such as gill nets and fish cages are banned.

Offenders are not arrested or fined, but their destructive fishing gear is confiscated — a heavy loss for poor families.

However, despite these efforts, river guards confiscated about 8,000m of gill nets over just a few days early last month, Touch said, evidence the practice is still common.

Worse still, since the ban came into effect, at least two adult dolphins have been found dead, ensnared in netting, he added.